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    Grassroot Perspective – Aug. 7, 2003-Citizens’ Budget Update; Free Market Healthcare; A Letter from Rev. Robert A. Sirico; The Good and Evil of Taxation

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    “Dick Rowland Image”

    ”Shoots (News, Views and Quotes)”

    Editor’s Note: City Council Budget Chair Ann Kobayashi and State, Chief of Staff Bob Awana both have budget info described below. It is pertinent to Hawaii.

    – Citizens’ Budget Update

    Two new organizations have endorsed Reason Foundation and Performance Institute’s Citizens’ Budget approach. We are pleased to welcome the Valley Industry and Commerce Association (VICA) and the Economic Alliance of San Fernando Valley to the coalition that believes the state should balance the budget through structural reform, performance measurement, and innovative service delivery rather than drastic cuts, tax increases, or new debt. For more information on the Citizens’ Budget please visit https://www.rppi.org/cacitizensbudget.html

    – Free Market Healthcare

    To the extent a healthcare “crisis” exists, it’s because nobody in the healthcare system, least of all the patients, feels that they are in control. Reason Science Correspondent Ronald Bailey asks whether politicians and policy makers are courageous enough to fix this. https://www.reason.com/rb/rb052803.shtml

    – Private Water, Public Interest
    Public benefits can flow from private water. In this new Reason policy brief, authors Alexei Tsybine and Don S. Evans, P.E. demonstrate how public-private partnerships can result in lower water rates while providing the same or higher levels of services. https://www.rppi.org/pb22.pdf

    Above articles are quoted from Reason Foundation, Reason Alert 5/29/03 https://www.rppi.org

    – A Letter from Rev. Robert A. Sirico

    President of The Acton Institute

    Dear Friends,

    During the 1920s a young man (we will call him Dale) purchased his father’s dairy farm in Allendale, Michigan, and started a business as a milkman. The early and long hours he dedicated to running the dairy provided a good living for himself and his family. But through no fault of his own, the market for milk changed. Grocery stores began to sell milk at a fraction of the lowest price that Dale could offer. The dairy quickly went bankrupt. Now middle-aged and unemployed, Dale felt like this life had reached a dead end. Not knowing what else to do, Dale began to meet with the pastor at his church.

    Dale’s pastor proved to be not only empathetic but also wise. He recognized that working as a milkman for years inculcated Dale with extensive sales experience. The pastor prompted Dale to contact a real estate agent in their church. The real estate agent agreed to give Dale a chance, and Dale’s aptitude for salesmanship took over. He became much more successful as a real estate agent than he ever would have been if the dairy had remained solvent.

    It went well for Dale, but the character in this story who impresses me is the pastor. Rather than feeding a resentment of the market based on its perceived unfairness, confusing business failure with moral failure, blaming Dale’s misfortune on capitalist supermaket owners, or convincing Dale that he deserved a handout from the government as compensation, this pastor reminded Dale of his creative potential and indicated opportunities that might have been otherwise overlooked. A wise pastor, indeed!

    Through our programs at the Acton Institute, we work hard to prevent these sagacious pastors from becoming extinct. Your financial support makes our efforts possible. Thank you.

    Sincerely yours,

    Rev. Robert A. Sirico

    Above article is quoted from The Acton Institute Newsletter May 2003 https://www.acton.org

    ”Roots (Food for Thought)”

    – The Good and Evil of Taxation

    By David Hogberg

    In the first chapter of POLITICS, TAXATION, AND THE RULE OF LAW, a new book available from Public Interest Institute, Donald P. Racheter and Richard E. Wagner establish some fundamentals in the relationship between government, taxation, and individual rights. They state that “government is not the source of our rights of person and property.”1 Rather we establish government to preserve and protect our rights. This is part and parcel of democratic ideology.

    They acknowledge that taxation is the price we must pay to have a government that protects our rights. But they note that this justification for taxation is often abused to pay for things that have nothing to do with protecting rights. In one hypothetical example, the authors encourage us to imagine a small town with only three residents. The first two enjoy playing tennis, while the third does not. Yet because the first two comprise a voting majority, they decree that the building of a tennis court is a town activity. They are able to compel the third resident to contribute to the provision through taxation. This lowers the cost of building the tennis court for the first two residents.

    Racheter and Wagner note that “democratic ideology” often conflicts with “democratic practice.” A government rooted firmly in democratic ideology would not use taxation as a means of robbing Peter to pay Paul. But as the authors state, “taxation may be a necessary means of preserving and protecting rights of person and property, but it might also operate in various ways to undermine, abridge, and erode those rights.”2 That which preserves our liberty can also be used to undermine it.

    The authors then trace the intellectual history of public finance, particularly the major theoretical division. They focus on two theorists, Francis Edgeworth and Knut Wicksell. Edgeworth “construed taxation as something that a ruler does to improve the lot of his people.”3 Edgeworth assumed that a ruler could improve the general welfare of a nation via redistribution of income. He theorized that a person had less need for income the more income he or she had. To satisfy the needs of those with low incomes, the ruler was justified in redistributing income from those with a lot to those with little. This way, the ruler improved the general welfare of the nation. The authors note that this theory of public finance is more suitable for a nation “where the state or ruler was treated as a smart and benevolent means for improving society.”4 This theory is better suited to a despotic form of government than a democratic one.

    Wicksell, on the other hand, disliked a theory of public finance that was based on near absolute power of a ruler. He preferred a “catallactical approach” to public finance, that is, an approach based on the institutions that govern “political and fiscal relationships.”5 Instead of concerning itself with how a ruler can improve society, the Wicksellian approach to public finance focuses on the social interaction of people. This approach might lead to a system that benefits all citizens. However, “it might involve cases where some people gain at the expense of other people.”6

    The authors explain that the extent to which a system of taxation works for the benefit of all as opposed to bringing gains to some by imposing losses on others, is largely “controlled by the constitutional framework”7 of a society. They note that taxation is the price we pay for government and civil order. They also note that this does not justify unlimited taxation and state power. Taxation can be destructive if “it is too high or wrongly imposed.”8

    ENDNOTES:
    1Donald P. Racheter and Richard E. Wagner. “The Constitutional Framework for Democratic Taxation,” in Politics, Taxation, and the Rule of Law: The Power to Tax in Constitutional Perspective, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Boston, 2002, p.1. 2Ibid., p.2. 3Ibid., p.2. 4Ibid., p.3. 5Ibid., p.3. 6Ibid., p.3. 7Ibid., p.4. 8Ibid., p.4.

    The authors of this chapter of POLITICS, TAXATION, AND THE RULE OF LAW are Dr. Don Racheter and Dr. Richard Wagner. This summary of Dr. Racheter and Dr. Wagner’s chapter was written by David Hogberg, a Research Analyst with Public Interest Institute.

    Above article is quoted from Public Interest Institute at Iowa Wesleyen College, Institute Brief Vol 10 #17 https://www.limitedgovernment.org

    ”Evergreen (Today’s Quote)”

    “Outside of the killings, Washington has one of the lowest crime rates in the country.” — Former Mayor of Washington D.C., Marion Barry

    ”’Edited by Richard O. Rowland, president of Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, 1314 S. King Street, Suite 1163, Honolulu, HI 96814. Phone/fax is 808-591-9193, cell phone is 808-864-1776. Send him an email at:”’ mailto:grassroot@hawaii.rr.com ”’See the Web site at:”’ https://www.grassrootinstitute.org/

    Successful People are not Afraid of Failure

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    Successful people know that nothing ever goes exactly as planned. And no matter how hard you work, sooner or later you must face the reality that you failed. You tried to do something and weren’t successful. You didn’t get the result you wanted.

    You didn’t get the job you hoped for. You didn’t get the raise you deserved.
    You didn’t close the big order. Your largest account just walked out the
    door. You struck out with the bases loaded.

    You missed the winning shot at the buzzer. There was a fly in the
    ointment. There was a glitch somewhere. You failed. ”’So what!”’

    You don’t close every sale. You don’t win every game. You aren’t going to
    hit a home run every time you’re up to bat. You don’t always get what you
    want. Failure is OK. It’s part of life. It should be expected.

    The bigger question is: What do you do next? What do you do after you’ve failed?

    As Frank Sinatra sang: “You pick yourself up and get back in the race. That’s life …”

    You don’t feel sorry for yourself. You don’t mope around. You pick
    yourself up and do it again and again and again until you get it right!

    Failure is as much a part of life as success. Losing is as much a part of
    life as winning. The most important thing to think about is how can
    you ensure that you won’t fail in the same way a second time.

    Remember: You just can’t fail the last time you try.

    Life is a series of trial-and-error experiences. We are taught something
    by a teacher, and then we try to do it ourselves. The first time we do it
    we probably don’t get the results we want. So we try again, and again,
    and again. With practice we get better.

    Then we push ourselves as we try to do something that’s a little bit more
    difficult. As we succeed, our expectations increase, and so does the
    satisfaction that comes from the feeling of a job well done.

    So we set our sights a bit higher-to improve our results as compared to
    what we’ve done before and in relation to the results of those with
    whom we are competing-and we try again. We continue to push
    ourselves to new heights.

    When we succeed, we once again raise the bar. And when we don’t,
    we go back to work to improve our skills and talents, and try again.

    That is why I feel that the subjects of success and failure are so
    intertwined: because it is through failure that we grow and develop
    as individuals. We learn through our failures. Failures show us our
    flaws, our imperfections, the areas in which we need improvement.

    In order to achieve your goals, to fulfill your desires, to make your
    dreams come true, you’re going to have to work. It is hard work that
    makes you better at what you do, and failing from time to time is
    just a part of life.

    Remember: If you’re not experiencing failure, you’re not working hard enough.

    Overcome the Fear of Failure

    Failure is trying to do something and not getting the desired results.
    Fear of failure is something else. Fear of failure causes paralysis.

    It’s unfortunate, but many people go through life with a fear of failure.
    They’re so afraid that they’re going to make a mistake, that they won’t
    do something right, that it won’t be perfect, that they don’t try to
    do anything at all.

    So what happens? They become paralyzed and don’t do anything. And
    with this paralysis they lose the ability to have a rewarding, meaningful,
    and enjoyable life.

    It’s just physically impossible for someone who has a fear of failure
    to achieve anything, because that person has never tried. She never
    gave herself the opportunity to succeed.

    It is in doing, trying, and experiencing things you never did before
    that you grow and develop. Through practice you get better and
    better at the things you do.

    Learn From Your Failures

    When you experience failure, take some time to reflect upon what
    happened. Pull out a pad of paper and start writing down the answers
    to these questions:

    *Why did this happen?

    *What could I have done differently?

    *How can I do it better next time?

    *What changes should I make in my strategies?

    *What can I do to improve my planning and preparation?

    Study these answers. Analyze them. Then go out and do it
    better the next time.

    One day when I was playing tennis my instructor and I had a conversation
    about strategies. He said that if you’re losing, change your game. And if
    that doesn’t work, change your game again. You may still lose, but lose
    as many different ways as you can.

    Overcome the Six Symptoms of Fear
    Fear is being afraid. It is being anxious. It is feeling that you are in
    danger. In life, fear can be real and it can be imagined.

    But fear is actually nothing more than a state of mind that is subject to
    your control and direction. You can run away, or you can face the thing
    that is causing you to feel fearful. It is in facing the thing that is causing
    you to feel afraid that you grow as a person.

    These are the Six Symptoms of Fear:

    *1. INDIFFERENCE: You write things off because you feel they aren’t important. They’re beneath you. You don’t want to be bothered with them.

    *2. INDECISION: You can’t make up your mind. You don’t know if you should or shouldn’t do something. Or you can’t decide if you should do A instead of B. So you do nothing!

    *3. DOUBT: You’re not certain as to what you should do. You can’t make up your mind. You’re apprehensive.

    *4. WORRY: You feel anxious. You’re uneasy. You’re not sure you made the right decision. You don’t feel confident.

    *5. OVERCAUTIOUSNESS: You’re excessively or overly cautious. You check everything over and over and over again. You want to make sure everything’s right.

    *6. PROCRASTINATION: You put things off till later. You defer action. You wait so long to do something that the window of opportunity has opened and closed.

    Don’t allow these six symptoms of fear to keep you from achieving your goals.

    ”’Reprinted with permission from Jeffrey Mayer’s SucceedingInBusiness.com Newsletter. (Copyright, 2003, Jeffrey J. Mayer, SucceedingInBusiness.com.) To subscribe to Jeff’s free newsletter, visit:”’ https://www.SucceedingInBusiness.com

    Successful People are not Afraid of Failure

    0

    Successful people know that nothing ever goes exactly as planned. And no matter how hard you work, sooner or later you must face the reality that you failed. You tried to do something and weren’t successful. You didn’t get the result you wanted.

    You didn’t get the job you hoped for. You didn’t get the raise you deserved.
    You didn’t close the big order. Your largest account just walked out the
    door. You struck out with the bases loaded.

    You missed the winning shot at the buzzer. There was a fly in the
    ointment. There was a glitch somewhere. You failed. ”’So what!”’

    You don’t close every sale. You don’t win every game. You aren’t going to
    hit a home run every time you’re up to bat. You don’t always get what you
    want. Failure is OK. It’s part of life. It should be expected.

    The bigger question is: What do you do next? What do you do after you’ve failed?

    As Frank Sinatra sang: “You pick yourself up and get back in the race. That’s life …”

    You don’t feel sorry for yourself. You don’t mope around. You pick
    yourself up and do it again and again and again until you get it right!

    Failure is as much a part of life as success. Losing is as much a part of
    life as winning. The most important thing to think about is how can
    you ensure that you won’t fail in the same way a second time.

    Remember: You just can’t fail the last time you try.

    Life is a series of trial-and-error experiences. We are taught something
    by a teacher, and then we try to do it ourselves. The first time we do it
    we probably don’t get the results we want. So we try again, and again,
    and again. With practice we get better.

    Then we push ourselves as we try to do something that’s a little bit more
    difficult. As we succeed, our expectations increase, and so does the
    satisfaction that comes from the feeling of a job well done.

    So we set our sights a bit higher-to improve our results as compared to
    what we’ve done before and in relation to the results of those with
    whom we are competing-and we try again. We continue to push
    ourselves to new heights.

    When we succeed, we once again raise the bar. And when we don’t,
    we go back to work to improve our skills and talents, and try again.

    That is why I feel that the subjects of success and failure are so
    intertwined: because it is through failure that we grow and develop
    as individuals. We learn through our failures. Failures show us our
    flaws, our imperfections, the areas in which we need improvement.

    In order to achieve your goals, to fulfill your desires, to make your
    dreams come true, you’re going to have to work. It is hard work that
    makes you better at what you do, and failing from time to time is
    just a part of life.

    Remember: If you’re not experiencing failure, you’re not working hard enough.

    Overcome the Fear of Failure

    Failure is trying to do something and not getting the desired results.
    Fear of failure is something else. Fear of failure causes paralysis.

    It’s unfortunate, but many people go through life with a fear of failure.
    They’re so afraid that they’re going to make a mistake, that they won’t
    do something right, that it won’t be perfect, that they don’t try to
    do anything at all.

    So what happens? They become paralyzed and don’t do anything. And
    with this paralysis they lose the ability to have a rewarding, meaningful,
    and enjoyable life.

    It’s just physically impossible for someone who has a fear of failure
    to achieve anything, because that person has never tried. She never
    gave herself the opportunity to succeed.

    It is in doing, trying, and experiencing things you never did before
    that you grow and develop. Through practice you get better and
    better at the things you do.

    Learn From Your Failures

    When you experience failure, take some time to reflect upon what
    happened. Pull out a pad of paper and start writing down the answers
    to these questions:

    *Why did this happen?

    *What could I have done differently?

    *How can I do it better next time?

    *What changes should I make in my strategies?

    *What can I do to improve my planning and preparation?

    Study these answers. Analyze them. Then go out and do it
    better the next time.

    One day when I was playing tennis my instructor and I had a conversation
    about strategies. He said that if you’re losing, change your game. And if
    that doesn’t work, change your game again. You may still lose, but lose
    as many different ways as you can.

    Overcome the Six Symptoms of Fear
    Fear is being afraid. It is being anxious. It is feeling that you are in
    danger. In life, fear can be real and it can be imagined.

    But fear is actually nothing more than a state of mind that is subject to
    your control and direction. You can run away, or you can face the thing
    that is causing you to feel fearful. It is in facing the thing that is causing
    you to feel afraid that you grow as a person.

    These are the Six Symptoms of Fear:

    *1. INDIFFERENCE: You write things off because you feel they aren’t important. They’re beneath you. You don’t want to be bothered with them.

    *2. INDECISION: You can’t make up your mind. You don’t know if you should or shouldn’t do something. Or you can’t decide if you should do A instead of B. So you do nothing!

    *3. DOUBT: You’re not certain as to what you should do. You can’t make up your mind. You’re apprehensive.

    *4. WORRY: You feel anxious. You’re uneasy. You’re not sure you made the right decision. You don’t feel confident.

    *5. OVERCAUTIOUSNESS: You’re excessively or overly cautious. You check everything over and over and over again. You want to make sure everything’s right.

    *6. PROCRASTINATION: You put things off till later. You defer action. You wait so long to do something that the window of opportunity has opened and closed.

    Don’t allow these six symptoms of fear to keep you from achieving your goals.

    ”’Reprinted with permission from Jeffrey Mayer’s SucceedingInBusiness.com Newsletter. (Copyright, 2003, Jeffrey J. Mayer, SucceedingInBusiness.com.) To subscribe to Jeff’s free newsletter, visit:”’ https://www.SucceedingInBusiness.com

    Political Tittle-tattle: News and Entertainment from Hawaii's Political Arena

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    “Malia Lt Blue top Image”

    ”More than 600 Subpoenas Issued in Harris Campaign Spending Investigation”

    Law enforcement sources told Hawaii Reporter more than 600 subpoenas have been issued over the last several months in the investigation of the campaign and administration of Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris by city investigators.

    The vast majority of the subpoenas were sent to consultants hired by the city, such as architects and engineers, who accepted city construction and consulting jobs and then made substantial contributions to the campaign of the mayor.

    Other subpoenas were sent to attorneys, accountants and business managers who made sizable donations to the Harris campaign before receiving contracts, zoning or permits from the city.

    The Honolulu Police Department, Honolulu City Prosecutor and the state Campaign Spending Commission are investigating the connection between contracts, zoning and permitting issued by the city and campaign donations to the mayor.

    The mayor’s supporters allegedly are promoting a “pay to play” system, where those companies seeking contracts, subcontracts, zoning or permitting are asked to contribute to the campaign of Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris.

    ”Campaign Spending Commission Set to Fine More Consulting Companies for Illegal Contributions”

    The state Campaign Spending Commission has investigated the campaigns of several powerful Democrats including Honolulu Major Jeremy Harris, former Gov. Benjamin Cayetano, former Lt. Gov. Mazie Hirono and former Maui Mayor Kimo Apana, and found in some cases hundreds of thousands of dollars made in “false name” contributions.

    The individuals and corporations that made those false name contributions are being fined heavily for those illegal contributions and in the most severe cases are referred to the Honolulu Police Department and the Honolulu City Prosecutor for money laundering and other charges.

    Tomorrow four more companies are set to appear before the state Campaign Spending Commission’s 5-member panel to finalize their conciliation agreements, including Edward Noda & Associates, Randolph H. Murayama, Grant Thorton LLP and R.T Tanaka Engineers Inc. (Kirk T. Tanaka).

    ”Council in Political Power Struggle – Media Does Not Tell Whole Story”

    Hawaii media last night reported Honolulu City Council Budget Chair Ann Kobayashi was planning an overthrow of City Council Chair Gary Okino and would likely make her move today at the monthly full council meeting, which begins at 10 a.m.

    What the media did not report is why Kobayashi was one of five council members considering whether they want to reorganize the 9-member Council.

    Council Chair Gary Okino, who is backed by Council Members Nestor Garcia, Barbara Marshall and Mike Gabbard, attempted to re-organize the Council first and throw Kobayashi out as budget chair.

    Kobayashi, who has been budget chair since she came on the Council two years ago, has been a highly controversial and aggressive budget chair, carefully scrutinizing every budget item and dollar spent by Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris. Harris, a powerful mayor who has been criticized for his extravagant spending habits, did not like being reigned in and having his budget so carefully reviewed and cut.

    Past budget chairs who acted as Kobayashi has while Harris has been in office have historically been ousted in retaliation by the mayor who is a master at rallying just enough council members in his favor to put in the council members of his choice.

    And he has historically rewarded those council members who do as he says and punished those who have not.

    Case in point: Mufi Hannemann was council chair but was ousted during a Council re-organization inspired by the mayor after Hannemann asked too many questions about the mayor’s budget and became too critical of the mayor’s projects. Hannemann was replaced by Jon Yoshimura as chair, and although Yoshimura is no longer a council member, he is still being rewarded by the mayor with a lucrative contract from the city Board of Water Supply. Another supporter of the mayor, former Council Member Steve Holmes, also is being rewarded with a substantial city salary from a useless position in the mayor’s administration.

    Another example of the mayor turning on those who ask too many questions: John Henry Felix was Council budget chair until he got too critical of the mayor and was replaced in a re-organization encouraged by the mayor.

    Kobayashi, who says it is not likely she and her supporters will attempt a re-organization today because they have to think about what they will do and how the Council will be re-organized, says she is only reacting to Okino’s move and protecting her chairmanship.

    ”Lingle Hosts First ‘Talk Story’ Event in Kailua”

    Gov. Linda Lingle, over protests of Democrat critics who say she is too good at getting favorable publicity for herself, hosted her first “Talk Story” event of the year last night.

    The governor, who is traveling throughout the state to meet with various communities about their concerns and wishes, met first with the people from Kailua and Waimanalo at Kailua High School. Lingle’s administrators came along to answer any questions from the audience that might involve their respective departments.

    While the governor is fielding questions and addressing concerns on almost any issue, Lt. Gov. James “Duke” Aiona is on his own independent “Talk Story” tour to discuss Hawaii’s illegal drug problem, especially the “ice” epidemic which, according to the media, is sweeping the state.

    Last night, the governor did answer questions about public education, charter schools, Hawaii’s low income housing “crisis” and the state budget.

    ”Case Goes to Israel”

    Congressman Ed Case, D-Second District, Hawaii, is in Israel as a part of one of the largest Congressional delegations ever to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, members of the Knesset, and Arab and Palestinian leaders, including Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas. The delegation of 29 members of the U.S. House plan to discuss prospects for peace in the Middle East, Israel’s security situation, and the status of important economic and political trends in Israel.

    The delegation also will meet with defense and economic experts, peace process negotiators and leaders from a variety of religious and political groups in Israel and visit centers for new Ethiopian and Russian immigrants, military bases, universities, hospitals, and Jewish, Christian and Islamic holy sites.

    Case says this visit will provide insight into a region that is the key to so much of America’s foreign policy. “Our delegation will meet with Israeli, Arab and Palestinian leaders and key representatives from major political groups and a cross-section of Israel’s population. In the wake of the war against Iraq, our nation needs to refocus our attention and re-dedicate our commitment to the Middle East peace process,” Case says.

    The trip is sponsored by the American Israel Education Foundation, a supporting organization of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). AIEF sponsors education programs such as trips to Israel for community leaders and elected officials, seminars on Middle East issues at universities across the country, and other projects that help to educate the general public about the U.S.-Israel relationship.

    Following the trip to Israel, Case be in Hawaii from Aug. 11 to Sept. 2 for a three-week district work period, which will include a full schedule of meetings, speeches, and six Talk Story town meetings on the islands of Hawaii and Kauai.

    ”Organization Calls for End to Judicial Filibuster”

    This week, a renegade minority in the U.S. Senate continued to filibuster several highly qualified judicial nominees who probably have the support of a majority of the Senate. We can’t know that, however, until the full Senate is able to hold a vote, says Dick Armey, spokesman for a Washington D.C.-based think tank, Citizens for a Sound Economy.

    Last Tuesday, for example, another attempt to override the filibuster of judicial nominee Priscilla Owen failed in the U.S. Senate. Although 53 Senators supported holding a clean vote on the Owen nomination, 60 votes were needed to defeat Senate obstructionists who continue to logjam the judicial selection process, Armey says.

    Owens is nominated to the Fifth Circuit, which has so few judges that her seat is classified as a “judicial emergency.” Citizens for a Sound Economy (CSE) supports an orderly, functioning judiciary — led by judges who respect Constitutional limits on governmental power — as an essential element of our economic freedom and growth. CSE members have been rallying in Michigan and other states to demand prompt votes on all of President Bush’s judicial nominees.

    CSE President Paul Beckner says a Senate minority is holding America’s justice system hostage. He points to Priscilla Owens, Miguel Estrada, and Bill Pryor, who are all highly qualified, mainstream nominees with bi-partisan support, and a number of other nominees who are bottled up in the Judiciary Committee.

    “It’s time to stop using our judicial system to settle partisan political scores. These judicial nominees deserve a fair up-and-down vote by the full Senate, especially since many courts are already operating on a ‘judicial emergency’ basis. CSE Members across the country will continue to take action and demand fair treatment, and a prompt vote for these nominees.”

    ”Program Expanded To Reach Candidates in West Oahu”

    Argosy University/Honolulu announced in a partnership with Kahi Mohala, the university has expanded its master’s degree program in marriage & family therapy to the west side of Oahu, thereby reaching hundreds of new candidates. The program at the Kahi Mohala campus is slated to begin this fall and is an extension of Hawaii’s oldest and largest marriage and family therapy program, which previously has been successfully offered at Argosy University’s Hilo/Hawaii, Maui and Kauai extension campuses. Argosy University/Honolulu offers a doctoral program in clinical psychology; post-doctoral programs in clinical respecialization and psychopharmacology; master’s programs in clinical psychology, school psychology concentration, marriage and family therapy, and the bachelor of arts completion program. To learn more about Argosy University visit the Web site at https://www.argosyu.edu or call the school at 808-536-5555 (888-323-2777, toll free Neighbor Islands).

    ”Looking for Jailees, Judges and Entertainers”

    Good News Jail & Prison Ministry is planning its 6th annual jail-a-thon on Friday, Aug. 29 at the Ward Warehouse center stage from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. The ministry hosts a jail-a-thon every year to raise funds to keep chaplain positions in Hawaii’s prisons because the state does not fund them. Coordinator Cheryl Rzonca, the station manager of TBN-Honolulu, says she is looking for volunteer jailees, judges and entertainers. Those interested in volunteering can call Rzonca at (808) 521-5826 or email her at mailto:crzonca@tbn.org

    ”Pizza Hut: $14,000 for New Books”

    The Bay Clinic, Inc., a family of Community Health Centers on the Big Island, received a grant of $14,000 from the Hawaii Pizza Hut Literacy Fund to purchase new books for its Reach Out and Read Program. The clinic’s program promotes reading by exposing families to reading during well-baby check ups, providing new books, and recruiting volunteer readers for the clinics’ waiting rooms.

    The Reach Out and Read program affects young families with children between the ages of 6 months and 5 years who are most at risk for reading failure. The Pizza Hut Hawaii grant will be used to purchase books for the health centers’ three established sites in Pahoa, Kau and Hilo, and the expansion of the Reach Out and Read program in the newest family health center in Keaau, upper Puna.

    Pizza Hut Hawaii, which has 46 locations in Hawaii, five in Guam and one in Saipan, is a strong advocate for literacy, and since 1992, the company has successfully raised more than $3 million for Hawaii literacy programs through its popular “Carryout for Literacy” campaign.

    ”’Send any tittle or tattle you might have to Malia Zimmerman at”’ mailto:Malia@HawaiiReporter.com ”’Send complaints elsewhere. Compliments and news tips accepted here.”’

    Political Tittle-tattle: News and Entertainment from Hawaii’s Political Arena

    0

    “Malia Lt Blue top Image”

    ”More than 600 Subpoenas Issued in Harris Campaign Spending Investigation”

    Law enforcement sources told Hawaii Reporter more than 600 subpoenas have been issued over the last several months in the investigation of the campaign and administration of Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris by city investigators.

    The vast majority of the subpoenas were sent to consultants hired by the city, such as architects and engineers, who accepted city construction and consulting jobs and then made substantial contributions to the campaign of the mayor.

    Other subpoenas were sent to attorneys, accountants and business managers who made sizable donations to the Harris campaign before receiving contracts, zoning or permits from the city.

    The Honolulu Police Department, Honolulu City Prosecutor and the state Campaign Spending Commission are investigating the connection between contracts, zoning and permitting issued by the city and campaign donations to the mayor.

    The mayor’s supporters allegedly are promoting a “pay to play” system, where those companies seeking contracts, subcontracts, zoning or permitting are asked to contribute to the campaign of Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris.

    ”Campaign Spending Commission Set to Fine More Consulting Companies for Illegal Contributions”

    The state Campaign Spending Commission has investigated the campaigns of several powerful Democrats including Honolulu Major Jeremy Harris, former Gov. Benjamin Cayetano, former Lt. Gov. Mazie Hirono and former Maui Mayor Kimo Apana, and found in some cases hundreds of thousands of dollars made in “false name” contributions.

    The individuals and corporations that made those false name contributions are being fined heavily for those illegal contributions and in the most severe cases are referred to the Honolulu Police Department and the Honolulu City Prosecutor for money laundering and other charges.

    Tomorrow four more companies are set to appear before the state Campaign Spending Commission’s 5-member panel to finalize their conciliation agreements, including Edward Noda & Associates, Randolph H. Murayama, Grant Thorton LLP and R.T Tanaka Engineers Inc. (Kirk T. Tanaka).

    ”Council in Political Power Struggle – Media Does Not Tell Whole Story”

    Hawaii media last night reported Honolulu City Council Budget Chair Ann Kobayashi was planning an overthrow of City Council Chair Gary Okino and would likely make her move today at the monthly full council meeting, which begins at 10 a.m.

    What the media did not report is why Kobayashi was one of five council members considering whether they want to reorganize the 9-member Council.

    Council Chair Gary Okino, who is backed by Council Members Nestor Garcia, Barbara Marshall and Mike Gabbard, attempted to re-organize the Council first and throw Kobayashi out as budget chair.

    Kobayashi, who has been budget chair since she came on the Council two years ago, has been a highly controversial and aggressive budget chair, carefully scrutinizing every budget item and dollar spent by Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris. Harris, a powerful mayor who has been criticized for his extravagant spending habits, did not like being reigned in and having his budget so carefully reviewed and cut.

    Past budget chairs who acted as Kobayashi has while Harris has been in office have historically been ousted in retaliation by the mayor who is a master at rallying just enough council members in his favor to put in the council members of his choice.

    And he has historically rewarded those council members who do as he says and punished those who have not.

    Case in point: Mufi Hannemann was council chair but was ousted during a Council re-organization inspired by the mayor after Hannemann asked too many questions about the mayor’s budget and became too critical of the mayor’s projects. Hannemann was replaced by Jon Yoshimura as chair, and although Yoshimura is no longer a council member, he is still being rewarded by the mayor with a lucrative contract from the city Board of Water Supply. Another supporter of the mayor, former Council Member Steve Holmes, also is being rewarded with a substantial city salary from a useless position in the mayor’s administration.

    Another example of the mayor turning on those who ask too many questions: John Henry Felix was Council budget chair until he got too critical of the mayor and was replaced in a re-organization encouraged by the mayor.

    Kobayashi, who says it is not likely she and her supporters will attempt a re-organization today because they have to think about what they will do and how the Council will be re-organized, says she is only reacting to Okino’s move and protecting her chairmanship.

    ”Lingle Hosts First ‘Talk Story’ Event in Kailua”

    Gov. Linda Lingle, over protests of Democrat critics who say she is too good at getting favorable publicity for herself, hosted her first “Talk Story” event of the year last night.

    The governor, who is traveling throughout the state to meet with various communities about their concerns and wishes, met first with the people from Kailua and Waimanalo at Kailua High School. Lingle’s administrators came along to answer any questions from the audience that might involve their respective departments.

    While the governor is fielding questions and addressing concerns on almost any issue, Lt. Gov. James “Duke” Aiona is on his own independent “Talk Story” tour to discuss Hawaii’s illegal drug problem, especially the “ice” epidemic which, according to the media, is sweeping the state.

    Last night, the governor did answer questions about public education, charter schools, Hawaii’s low income housing “crisis” and the state budget.

    ”Case Goes to Israel”

    Congressman Ed Case, D-Second District, Hawaii, is in Israel as a part of one of the largest Congressional delegations ever to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, members of the Knesset, and Arab and Palestinian leaders, including Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas. The delegation of 29 members of the U.S. House plan to discuss prospects for peace in the Middle East, Israel’s security situation, and the status of important economic and political trends in Israel.

    The delegation also will meet with defense and economic experts, peace process negotiators and leaders from a variety of religious and political groups in Israel and visit centers for new Ethiopian and Russian immigrants, military bases, universities, hospitals, and Jewish, Christian and Islamic holy sites.

    Case says this visit will provide insight into a region that is the key to so much of America’s foreign policy. “Our delegation will meet with Israeli, Arab and Palestinian leaders and key representatives from major political groups and a cross-section of Israel’s population. In the wake of the war against Iraq, our nation needs to refocus our attention and re-dedicate our commitment to the Middle East peace process,” Case says.

    The trip is sponsored by the American Israel Education Foundation, a supporting organization of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). AIEF sponsors education programs such as trips to Israel for community leaders and elected officials, seminars on Middle East issues at universities across the country, and other projects that help to educate the general public about the U.S.-Israel relationship.

    Following the trip to Israel, Case be in Hawaii from Aug. 11 to Sept. 2 for a three-week district work period, which will include a full schedule of meetings, speeches, and six Talk Story town meetings on the islands of Hawaii and Kauai.

    ”Organization Calls for End to Judicial Filibuster”

    This week, a renegade minority in the U.S. Senate continued to filibuster several highly qualified judicial nominees who probably have the support of a majority of the Senate. We can’t know that, however, until the full Senate is able to hold a vote, says Dick Armey, spokesman for a Washington D.C.-based think tank, Citizens for a Sound Economy.

    Last Tuesday, for example, another attempt to override the filibuster of judicial nominee Priscilla Owen failed in the U.S. Senate. Although 53 Senators supported holding a clean vote on the Owen nomination, 60 votes were needed to defeat Senate obstructionists who continue to logjam the judicial selection process, Armey says.

    Owens is nominated to the Fifth Circuit, which has so few judges that her seat is classified as a “judicial emergency.” Citizens for a Sound Economy (CSE) supports an orderly, functioning judiciary — led by judges who respect Constitutional limits on governmental power — as an essential element of our economic freedom and growth. CSE members have been rallying in Michigan and other states to demand prompt votes on all of President Bush’s judicial nominees.

    CSE President Paul Beckner says a Senate minority is holding America’s justice system hostage. He points to Priscilla Owens, Miguel Estrada, and Bill Pryor, who are all highly qualified, mainstream nominees with bi-partisan support, and a number of other nominees who are bottled up in the Judiciary Committee.

    “It’s time to stop using our judicial system to settle partisan political scores. These judicial nominees deserve a fair up-and-down vote by the full Senate, especially since many courts are already operating on a ‘judicial emergency’ basis. CSE Members across the country will continue to take action and demand fair treatment, and a prompt vote for these nominees.”

    ”Program Expanded To Reach Candidates in West Oahu”

    Argosy University/Honolulu announced in a partnership with Kahi Mohala, the university has expanded its master’s degree program in marriage & family therapy to the west side of Oahu, thereby reaching hundreds of new candidates. The program at the Kahi Mohala campus is slated to begin this fall and is an extension of Hawaii’s oldest and largest marriage and family therapy program, which previously has been successfully offered at Argosy University’s Hilo/Hawaii, Maui and Kauai extension campuses. Argosy University/Honolulu offers a doctoral program in clinical psychology; post-doctoral programs in clinical respecialization and psychopharmacology; master’s programs in clinical psychology, school psychology concentration, marriage and family therapy, and the bachelor of arts completion program. To learn more about Argosy University visit the Web site at https://www.argosyu.edu or call the school at 808-536-5555 (888-323-2777, toll free Neighbor Islands).

    ”Looking for Jailees, Judges and Entertainers”

    Good News Jail & Prison Ministry is planning its 6th annual jail-a-thon on Friday, Aug. 29 at the Ward Warehouse center stage from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. The ministry hosts a jail-a-thon every year to raise funds to keep chaplain positions in Hawaii’s prisons because the state does not fund them. Coordinator Cheryl Rzonca, the station manager of TBN-Honolulu, says she is looking for volunteer jailees, judges and entertainers. Those interested in volunteering can call Rzonca at (808) 521-5826 or email her at mailto:crzonca@tbn.org

    ”Pizza Hut: $14,000 for New Books”

    The Bay Clinic, Inc., a family of Community Health Centers on the Big Island, received a grant of $14,000 from the Hawaii Pizza Hut Literacy Fund to purchase new books for its Reach Out and Read Program. The clinic’s program promotes reading by exposing families to reading during well-baby check ups, providing new books, and recruiting volunteer readers for the clinics’ waiting rooms.

    The Reach Out and Read program affects young families with children between the ages of 6 months and 5 years who are most at risk for reading failure. The Pizza Hut Hawaii grant will be used to purchase books for the health centers’ three established sites in Pahoa, Kau and Hilo, and the expansion of the Reach Out and Read program in the newest family health center in Keaau, upper Puna.

    Pizza Hut Hawaii, which has 46 locations in Hawaii, five in Guam and one in Saipan, is a strong advocate for literacy, and since 1992, the company has successfully raised more than $3 million for Hawaii literacy programs through its popular “Carryout for Literacy” campaign.

    ”’Send any tittle or tattle you might have to Malia Zimmerman at”’ mailto:Malia@HawaiiReporter.com ”’Send complaints elsewhere. Compliments and news tips accepted here.”’

    Political Tittle-tattle: News and Entertainment from Hawaii’s Political Arena

    0

    “Malia Lt Blue top Image”

    ”More than 600 Subpoenas Issued in Harris Campaign Spending Investigation”

    Law enforcement sources told Hawaii Reporter more than 600 subpoenas have been issued over the last several months in the investigation of the campaign and administration of Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris by city investigators.

    The vast majority of the subpoenas were sent to consultants hired by the city, such as architects and engineers, who accepted city construction and consulting jobs and then made substantial contributions to the campaign of the mayor.

    Other subpoenas were sent to attorneys, accountants and business managers who made sizable donations to the Harris campaign before receiving contracts, zoning or permits from the city.

    The Honolulu Police Department, Honolulu City Prosecutor and the state Campaign Spending Commission are investigating the connection between contracts, zoning and permitting issued by the city and campaign donations to the mayor.

    The mayor’s supporters allegedly are promoting a “pay to play” system, where those companies seeking contracts, subcontracts, zoning or permitting are asked to contribute to the campaign of Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris.

    ”Campaign Spending Commission Set to Fine More Consulting Companies for Illegal Contributions”

    The state Campaign Spending Commission has investigated the campaigns of several powerful Democrats including Honolulu Major Jeremy Harris, former Gov. Benjamin Cayetano, former Lt. Gov. Mazie Hirono and former Maui Mayor Kimo Apana, and found in some cases hundreds of thousands of dollars made in “false name” contributions.

    The individuals and corporations that made those false name contributions are being fined heavily for those illegal contributions and in the most severe cases are referred to the Honolulu Police Department and the Honolulu City Prosecutor for money laundering and other charges.

    Tomorrow four more companies are set to appear before the state Campaign Spending Commission’s 5-member panel to finalize their conciliation agreements, including Edward Noda & Associates, Randolph H. Murayama, Grant Thorton LLP and R.T Tanaka Engineers Inc. (Kirk T. Tanaka).

    ”Council in Political Power Struggle – Media Does Not Tell Whole Story”

    Hawaii media last night reported Honolulu City Council Budget Chair Ann Kobayashi was planning an overthrow of City Council Chair Gary Okino and would likely make her move today at the monthly full council meeting, which begins at 10 a.m.

    What the media did not report is why Kobayashi was one of five council members considering whether they want to reorganize the 9-member Council.

    Council Chair Gary Okino, who is backed by Council Members Nestor Garcia, Barbara Marshall and Mike Gabbard, attempted to re-organize the Council first and throw Kobayashi out as budget chair.

    Kobayashi, who has been budget chair since she came on the Council two years ago, has been a highly controversial and aggressive budget chair, carefully scrutinizing every budget item and dollar spent by Honolulu Mayor Jeremy Harris. Harris, a powerful mayor who has been criticized for his extravagant spending habits, did not like being reigned in and having his budget so carefully reviewed and cut.

    Past budget chairs who acted as Kobayashi has while Harris has been in office have historically been ousted in retaliation by the mayor who is a master at rallying just enough council members in his favor to put in the council members of his choice.

    And he has historically rewarded those council members who do as he says and punished those who have not.

    Case in point: Mufi Hannemann was council chair but was ousted during a Council re-organization inspired by the mayor after Hannemann asked too many questions about the mayor’s budget and became too critical of the mayor’s projects. Hannemann was replaced by Jon Yoshimura as chair, and although Yoshimura is no longer a council member, he is still being rewarded by the mayor with a lucrative contract from the city Board of Water Supply. Another supporter of the mayor, former Council Member Steve Holmes, also is being rewarded with a substantial city salary from a useless position in the mayor’s administration.

    Another example of the mayor turning on those who ask too many questions: John Henry Felix was Council budget chair until he got too critical of the mayor and was replaced in a re-organization encouraged by the mayor.

    Kobayashi, who says it is not likely she and her supporters will attempt a re-organization today because they have to think about what they will do and how the Council will be re-organized, says she is only reacting to Okino’s move and protecting her chairmanship.

    ”Lingle Hosts First ‘Talk Story’ Event in Kailua”

    Gov. Linda Lingle, over protests of Democrat critics who say she is too good at getting favorable publicity for herself, hosted her first “Talk Story” event of the year last night.

    The governor, who is traveling throughout the state to meet with various communities about their concerns and wishes, met first with the people from Kailua and Waimanalo at Kailua High School. Lingle’s administrators came along to answer any questions from the audience that might involve their respective departments.

    While the governor is fielding questions and addressing concerns on almost any issue, Lt. Gov. James “Duke” Aiona is on his own independent “Talk Story” tour to discuss Hawaii’s illegal drug problem, especially the “ice” epidemic which, according to the media, is sweeping the state.

    Last night, the governor did answer questions about public education, charter schools, Hawaii’s low income housing “crisis” and the state budget.

    ”Case Goes to Israel”

    Congressman Ed Case, D-Second District, Hawaii, is in Israel as a part of one of the largest Congressional delegations ever to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, members of the Knesset, and Arab and Palestinian leaders, including Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas. The delegation of 29 members of the U.S. House plan to discuss prospects for peace in the Middle East, Israel’s security situation, and the status of important economic and political trends in Israel.

    The delegation also will meet with defense and economic experts, peace process negotiators and leaders from a variety of religious and political groups in Israel and visit centers for new Ethiopian and Russian immigrants, military bases, universities, hospitals, and Jewish, Christian and Islamic holy sites.

    Case says this visit will provide insight into a region that is the key to so much of America’s foreign policy. “Our delegation will meet with Israeli, Arab and Palestinian leaders and key representatives from major political groups and a cross-section of Israel’s population. In the wake of the war against Iraq, our nation needs to refocus our attention and re-dedicate our commitment to the Middle East peace process,” Case says.

    The trip is sponsored by the American Israel Education Foundation, a supporting organization of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). AIEF sponsors education programs such as trips to Israel for community leaders and elected officials, seminars on Middle East issues at universities across the country, and other projects that help to educate the general public about the U.S.-Israel relationship.

    Following the trip to Israel, Case be in Hawaii from Aug. 11 to Sept. 2 for a three-week district work period, which will include a full schedule of meetings, speeches, and six Talk Story town meetings on the islands of Hawaii and Kauai.

    ”Organization Calls for End to Judicial Filibuster”

    This week, a renegade minority in the U.S. Senate continued to filibuster several highly qualified judicial nominees who probably have the support of a majority of the Senate. We can’t know that, however, until the full Senate is able to hold a vote, says Dick Armey, spokesman for a Washington D.C.-based think tank, Citizens for a Sound Economy.

    Last Tuesday, for example, another attempt to override the filibuster of judicial nominee Priscilla Owen failed in the U.S. Senate. Although 53 Senators supported holding a clean vote on the Owen nomination, 60 votes were needed to defeat Senate obstructionists who continue to logjam the judicial selection process, Armey says.

    Owens is nominated to the Fifth Circuit, which has so few judges that her seat is classified as a “judicial emergency.” Citizens for a Sound Economy (CSE) supports an orderly, functioning judiciary — led by judges who respect Constitutional limits on governmental power — as an essential element of our economic freedom and growth. CSE members have been rallying in Michigan and other states to demand prompt votes on all of President Bush’s judicial nominees.

    CSE President Paul Beckner says a Senate minority is holding America’s justice system hostage. He points to Priscilla Owens, Miguel Estrada, and Bill Pryor, who are all highly qualified, mainstream nominees with bi-partisan support, and a number of other nominees who are bottled up in the Judiciary Committee.

    “It’s time to stop using our judicial system to settle partisan political scores. These judicial nominees deserve a fair up-and-down vote by the full Senate, especially since many courts are already operating on a ‘judicial emergency’ basis. CSE Members across the country will continue to take action and demand fair treatment, and a prompt vote for these nominees.”

    ”Program Expanded To Reach Candidates in West Oahu”

    Argosy University/Honolulu announced in a partnership with Kahi Mohala, the university has expanded its master’s degree program in marriage & family therapy to the west side of Oahu, thereby reaching hundreds of new candidates. The program at the Kahi Mohala campus is slated to begin this fall and is an extension of Hawaii’s oldest and largest marriage and family therapy program, which previously has been successfully offered at Argosy University’s Hilo/Hawaii, Maui and Kauai extension campuses. Argosy University/Honolulu offers a doctoral program in clinical psychology; post-doctoral programs in clinical respecialization and psychopharmacology; master’s programs in clinical psychology, school psychology concentration, marriage and family therapy, and the bachelor of arts completion program. To learn more about Argosy University visit the Web site at https://www.argosyu.edu or call the school at 808-536-5555 (888-323-2777, toll free Neighbor Islands).

    ”Looking for Jailees, Judges and Entertainers”

    Good News Jail & Prison Ministry is planning its 6th annual jail-a-thon on Friday, Aug. 29 at the Ward Warehouse center stage from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. The ministry hosts a jail-a-thon every year to raise funds to keep chaplain positions in Hawaii’s prisons because the state does not fund them. Coordinator Cheryl Rzonca, the station manager of TBN-Honolulu, says she is looking for volunteer jailees, judges and entertainers. Those interested in volunteering can call Rzonca at (808) 521-5826 or email her at mailto:crzonca@tbn.org

    ”Pizza Hut: $14,000 for New Books”

    The Bay Clinic, Inc., a family of Community Health Centers on the Big Island, received a grant of $14,000 from the Hawaii Pizza Hut Literacy Fund to purchase new books for its Reach Out and Read Program. The clinic’s program promotes reading by exposing families to reading during well-baby check ups, providing new books, and recruiting volunteer readers for the clinics’ waiting rooms.

    The Reach Out and Read program affects young families with children between the ages of 6 months and 5 years who are most at risk for reading failure. The Pizza Hut Hawaii grant will be used to purchase books for the health centers’ three established sites in Pahoa, Kau and Hilo, and the expansion of the Reach Out and Read program in the newest family health center in Keaau, upper Puna.

    Pizza Hut Hawaii, which has 46 locations in Hawaii, five in Guam and one in Saipan, is a strong advocate for literacy, and since 1992, the company has successfully raised more than $3 million for Hawaii literacy programs through its popular “Carryout for Literacy” campaign.

    ”’Send any tittle or tattle you might have to Malia Zimmerman at”’ mailto:Malia@HawaiiReporter.com ”’Send complaints elsewhere. Compliments and news tips accepted here.”’

    No Joy in Demville

    0

    Before the morticians makeup was barely dry on the pride of Saddam’s loins, the liberal echo chamber that is the NY Times swiftly ran an op-ed, taking the cue from their progressive allies in Washington. Entitled “Better alive than dead,” by writer Sandra Mackey, the op-ed laments the deaths of Saddam Hussein’s two murderous, incubi-like sons, Uday and Qusay, arguing the point that alive, the Hussein boys would have been of greater value. Ms. Mackey calls the deaths of these wholesale monsters a “tactical victory,” but not a “strategic one.” But that seems more like wishful thinking on her part, as her article does not withstand the scrutiny of a public informed. While shedding some light on the rise of Saddam and his Baathist party, the rest of her commentary proved to be the usual captious twaddle that envelops the left so completely these days. Laying out one scenario after another that depicts how wrong the U.S. may have been in sending to hell a pair of doorkeepers, not once in 800 plus words can Sandra Mackey personally bring herself to say that the demise of the brothers Hussein may have been an unqualified good thing.

    But it’s really nothing new to anyone remotely paying attention to the political discourse between the two major parties. To overly simplify, one looks at the glass half full, and the other looks at it half empty. One party believes in the innate goodness that America has displayed since her founding, the other party believes in an America that is devoutly unfair in its dealings at home and abroad. One Party dauntlessly protects and projects the ideals and identity of America, while the other Party maliciously undermines these same ideas by continuously flaying her elected leader at every opportunity, even in a war footing. By now, the practical reader has figured out just who is looking up from the bottom of the glass, and sinking ever further.

    As Americans, we consider ourselves a savvy, yet down to earth people. We also know a con job when we see it. While media elites and Democrats cry in calamitous alarm about the new “quagmire” in Iraq, they know better. As war, any war, cannot be a seamless affair, the war in Iraq has generally gone well. The utilities are back up on line, better than before, along with the oil wells and refineries starting to export 1 million barrels a day. A governing council consisting of 25 members representative of the country’s ethnicity, Iraq’s first, has recently been recognized by the UN secretary General Kofi Annan. Predictively, as rocky a road to Democracy that Iraq is on is bound to have its unpredictable potholes. And along the road to freedom comes the deaths of freedom’s keepers, the American military.

    To date we have lost some 250 men in operation Iraqi freedom and the peace effort thereafter. Though often said, and keenly felt, it is always one too many. But in truth when using history as your guide, the trials and travails of this war have not claimed nearly as many. For perspective, which the Democratic Party needs a good dose of, nearly 5000 men perished between the sunrise and sunset of D-day. In these terms, operation Iraqi freedom has been a triumph of the ages. There will be more losses to come, but not enough to call it off and go home. Wish as they might, there will be no “quagmire” in Iraq for Democrats to break into song over. For nearly two and a half years, Democrats have displayed an all-consuming hatred for the Bush Administration, notably for its leader. Like a rash that spreads when scratched, this hatred has spread to the point of consuming all 9 Democratic hopefuls for the office of President, and has installed the deeply radical left of the party as the banner carriers into political battle. Democrats, once a party of action, have metastasized into the party of reactionaries.

    On the very day Uday and Qusay were killed, the new McGovernites that will lead the party into 2004 let it be known that there was no joy in Demville. Howard Dean: “I think in general the ends do not justify the means.”

    Richard Gephardt: “Foreign policy isn’t a John Wayne movie, where we catch the bad guys, hoist a few cold ones, and then everything fades to black” It is “machismo” and “arrogant unilateralism.” “I believe George Bush has left us less safe and secure than we were four years ago.”

    John Kerry: “The question is whether our diplomacy will be equally up to the task in assembling a coalition to create a real and lasting peace.”

    The above is the future of the Democratic Party, in a free falling spiral toward obscurity.

    A caveat to all the nay saying Democrats are doing over Iraq is the effect it has on our troops. Rep. Mike Pence, an Indiana Republican, recently visited with wounded marines in Bethesda. Upon talking to an injured sergeant, Rep. Pence reports, “I think the criticism is reaching these guys from what they’re telling me.” With the exception of ensconced liberal shibboleths, who find fault in every waking moment of life already, the unremitting democratic litany of supposed failure via the Bush Administration looks to derail the country as a whole in every issue Bush deals with. And as with Iraq, it is done for strict political gain, without any attention given to the very real consequences it can have.

    Since President Bush has come into office, it has been one real or fabricated crisis after another. Terrorism, war, bad economy, strained relations with allies, corporate scandals, on and on. But to Bush’s credit, he has met them head on, and has crafted a policy to deal with each one. Obviously, he could not expect any help from the opposite side of the aisle, but neither should he accept the low brow brayings of a party that is not only out of power, but more clearly than ever in its history, out of ideas. There are no solutions from liberals, only condemnation of those who seek solutions. It is refreshing to see the President begin to counter punch a bit from the mediaimposed quagmires of Iraq, and it will be even better still when Saddam Hussein is captured or killed, and the mystery of the WMD’s will come to light.

    In the city of Boston, Massachusetts, The Democratic Party will hold its National Convention the week of July 26, 2004, at Boston’s Fleet Center. By then, the country will know who has won the fight for the party’s soul. As it stands, the uber-liberals are running away with it, while the Joe Libermans and the people at the DLC look on in horror at the Deans and Kucinichs that define the party today. Though less shrill than their cousins at the DNC, even these self-defined “centrist” Democrats have problems basking in the victories America has so far achieved at home and abroad, and suffer through an identity crisis of sorts. From now till Election Day, the overt criticism will only intensify, as like a drowning man, democrats will flail for any issue to grab on to.

    In the doom and gloom world of Democratic politics, it might be a good idea to put them all on suicide watch, such is the catastrophe of life under a successful Conservative President.

    ”’Vincent Fiore is a small business owner and is an active “citizen Politician” for the GOP. He currently contributes commentary to 5 political Web sites on a weekly basis. Send an email to:”’ mailto:ANWAR004@AOL.COM

    ”’Frontiers of Freedom – “Freedom Update” The Freedom Update is a weekly newsletter that announces exciting events, discusses important public policy issues, and more.”’ https://OpinionEditorials.com ”’is brought to you by Frontiers of Freedom.”’

    ”’Copyright 2002-2003 Frontiers of Freedom”’

    No Joy in Demville

    0

    Before the morticians makeup was barely dry on the pride of Saddam’s loins, the liberal echo chamber that is the NY Times swiftly ran an op-ed, taking the cue from their progressive allies in Washington. Entitled “Better alive than dead,” by writer Sandra Mackey, the op-ed laments the deaths of Saddam Hussein’s two murderous, incubi-like sons, Uday and Qusay, arguing the point that alive, the Hussein boys would have been of greater value. Ms. Mackey calls the deaths of these wholesale monsters a “tactical victory,” but not a “strategic one.” But that seems more like wishful thinking on her part, as her article does not withstand the scrutiny of a public informed. While shedding some light on the rise of Saddam and his Baathist party, the rest of her commentary proved to be the usual captious twaddle that envelops the left so completely these days. Laying out one scenario after another that depicts how wrong the U.S. may have been in sending to hell a pair of doorkeepers, not once in 800 plus words can Sandra Mackey personally bring herself to say that the demise of the brothers Hussein may have been an unqualified good thing.

    But it’s really nothing new to anyone remotely paying attention to the political discourse between the two major parties. To overly simplify, one looks at the glass half full, and the other looks at it half empty. One party believes in the innate goodness that America has displayed since her founding, the other party believes in an America that is devoutly unfair in its dealings at home and abroad. One Party dauntlessly protects and projects the ideals and identity of America, while the other Party maliciously undermines these same ideas by continuously flaying her elected leader at every opportunity, even in a war footing. By now, the practical reader has figured out just who is looking up from the bottom of the glass, and sinking ever further.

    As Americans, we consider ourselves a savvy, yet down to earth people. We also know a con job when we see it. While media elites and Democrats cry in calamitous alarm about the new “quagmire” in Iraq, they know better. As war, any war, cannot be a seamless affair, the war in Iraq has generally gone well. The utilities are back up on line, better than before, along with the oil wells and refineries starting to export 1 million barrels a day. A governing council consisting of 25 members representative of the country’s ethnicity, Iraq’s first, has recently been recognized by the UN secretary General Kofi Annan. Predictively, as rocky a road to Democracy that Iraq is on is bound to have its unpredictable potholes. And along the road to freedom comes the deaths of freedom’s keepers, the American military.

    To date we have lost some 250 men in operation Iraqi freedom and the peace effort thereafter. Though often said, and keenly felt, it is always one too many. But in truth when using history as your guide, the trials and travails of this war have not claimed nearly as many. For perspective, which the Democratic Party needs a good dose of, nearly 5000 men perished between the sunrise and sunset of D-day. In these terms, operation Iraqi freedom has been a triumph of the ages. There will be more losses to come, but not enough to call it off and go home. Wish as they might, there will be no “quagmire” in Iraq for Democrats to break into song over. For nearly two and a half years, Democrats have displayed an all-consuming hatred for the Bush Administration, notably for its leader. Like a rash that spreads when scratched, this hatred has spread to the point of consuming all 9 Democratic hopefuls for the office of President, and has installed the deeply radical left of the party as the banner carriers into political battle. Democrats, once a party of action, have metastasized into the party of reactionaries.

    On the very day Uday and Qusay were killed, the new McGovernites that will lead the party into 2004 let it be known that there was no joy in Demville. Howard Dean: “I think in general the ends do not justify the means.”

    Richard Gephardt: “Foreign policy isn’t a John Wayne movie, where we catch the bad guys, hoist a few cold ones, and then everything fades to black” It is “machismo” and “arrogant unilateralism.” “I believe George Bush has left us less safe and secure than we were four years ago.”

    John Kerry: “The question is whether our diplomacy will be equally up to the task in assembling a coalition to create a real and lasting peace.”

    The above is the future of the Democratic Party, in a free falling spiral toward obscurity.

    A caveat to all the nay saying Democrats are doing over Iraq is the effect it has on our troops. Rep. Mike Pence, an Indiana Republican, recently visited with wounded marines in Bethesda. Upon talking to an injured sergeant, Rep. Pence reports, “I think the criticism is reaching these guys from what they’re telling me.” With the exception of ensconced liberal shibboleths, who find fault in every waking moment of life already, the unremitting democratic litany of supposed failure via the Bush Administration looks to derail the country as a whole in every issue Bush deals with. And as with Iraq, it is done for strict political gain, without any attention given to the very real consequences it can have.

    Since President Bush has come into office, it has been one real or fabricated crisis after another. Terrorism, war, bad economy, strained relations with allies, corporate scandals, on and on. But to Bush’s credit, he has met them head on, and has crafted a policy to deal with each one. Obviously, he could not expect any help from the opposite side of the aisle, but neither should he accept the low brow brayings of a party that is not only out of power, but more clearly than ever in its history, out of ideas. There are no solutions from liberals, only condemnation of those who seek solutions. It is refreshing to see the President begin to counter punch a bit from the mediaimposed quagmires of Iraq, and it will be even better still when Saddam Hussein is captured or killed, and the mystery of the WMD’s will come to light.

    In the city of Boston, Massachusetts, The Democratic Party will hold its National Convention the week of July 26, 2004, at Boston’s Fleet Center. By then, the country will know who has won the fight for the party’s soul. As it stands, the uber-liberals are running away with it, while the Joe Libermans and the people at the DLC look on in horror at the Deans and Kucinichs that define the party today. Though less shrill than their cousins at the DNC, even these self-defined “centrist” Democrats have problems basking in the victories America has so far achieved at home and abroad, and suffer through an identity crisis of sorts. From now till Election Day, the overt criticism will only intensify, as like a drowning man, democrats will flail for any issue to grab on to.

    In the doom and gloom world of Democratic politics, it might be a good idea to put them all on suicide watch, such is the catastrophe of life under a successful Conservative President.

    ”’Vincent Fiore is a small business owner and is an active “citizen Politician” for the GOP. He currently contributes commentary to 5 political Web sites on a weekly basis. Send an email to:”’ mailto:ANWAR004@AOL.COM

    ”’Frontiers of Freedom – “Freedom Update” The Freedom Update is a weekly newsletter that announces exciting events, discusses important public policy issues, and more.”’ https://OpinionEditorials.com ”’is brought to you by Frontiers of Freedom.”’

    ”’Copyright 2002-2003 Frontiers of Freedom”’

    Rumsfeld Announces 9-11 Pentagon Memorial Fund

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    WASHINGTON (Talon News) — Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, in a taped message last week, asked Department of Defense employees to join him in kicking off a campaign to raise $20 million which will be used to build a memorial to those Pentagon employees killed in the attacks on America on September 11, 2001.

    “Department of Defense employees are helping to raise funds to build and maintain the Pentagon Memorial dedicated to September 11th,” Rumsfeld said. “While this is not an official DoD solicitation — it is totally voluntary — I do want to say that this effort has my enthusiastic personal support.”

    On September 11th, 184 military and civilian employees who worked at the Pentagon were killed after al Qaeda terrorists hijacked American Airlines Flight 77 and crashed the passenger jet into the headquarters of the U.S. Department of Defense.

    The memorial is planned to be built on two acres of land west of the World War II-era facility along the path the doomed flight took before hitting the nearly 4 million square foot structure.

    “The display will have 184 benches with the name of each victim — ranging from age 3 to age 71 — engraved on a bench,” Rumsfeld said.

    He continued, “In the years ahead, millions of Americans will see this moving memorial and think back to what happened on September 11th. And they will remember our brave men and women in uniform who rose to the challenge in the months that followed. They will be reminded that our country cannot be free unless we are strong.”

    The DOD Personnel Pentagon Memorial Organization, a voluntary association of civilian and military personnel, is organizing the campaign, and they are not accepting any public financing.

    The group is planning to spend up to $12 million on initial construction, and the remainder will be spent on maintenance for the memorial. The fundraising effort began on July 21 and runs through August 8.

    The goal is to have construction completed by next summer so the public will be able to visit the memorial in September, 2004. The opening will not be held on September 11 in order to fulfill the request of the Family Steering Committee which hopes to avoid adding to the “already emotional nature of the day.”

    Groups involved in the completion of this project include: the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD), Washington Headquarters Services (WHS), the Pentagon Renovation Program (PENREN), Real Estate and Facilities (RE&F), the Office of Family Policy, Family Members of Pentagon Victims, and Kaseman Beckman Amsterdam Studio (KBAS), who designed the winning memorial concept. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers was responsible for the Pentagon Memorial Site Selection and Design Competition.

    Those wishing to contribute to the memorial fund are directed to make their checks payable to the U.S. Treasury and send them to:

    Washington Headquarters Services Pentagon Memorial / Repair Fund Budget & Finance, Room 3B269 1155 Defense Pentagon Washington, DC 20301-1155.

    Copyright

    Rumsfeld Announces 9-11 Pentagon Memorial Fund

    0

    WASHINGTON (Talon News) — Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, in a taped message last week, asked Department of Defense employees to join him in kicking off a campaign to raise $20 million which will be used to build a memorial to those Pentagon employees killed in the attacks on America on September 11, 2001.

    “Department of Defense employees are helping to raise funds to build and maintain the Pentagon Memorial dedicated to September 11th,” Rumsfeld said. “While this is not an official DoD solicitation — it is totally voluntary — I do want to say that this effort has my enthusiastic personal support.”

    On September 11th, 184 military and civilian employees who worked at the Pentagon were killed after al Qaeda terrorists hijacked American Airlines Flight 77 and crashed the passenger jet into the headquarters of the U.S. Department of Defense.

    The memorial is planned to be built on two acres of land west of the World War II-era facility along the path the doomed flight took before hitting the nearly 4 million square foot structure.

    “The display will have 184 benches with the name of each victim — ranging from age 3 to age 71 — engraved on a bench,” Rumsfeld said.

    He continued, “In the years ahead, millions of Americans will see this moving memorial and think back to what happened on September 11th. And they will remember our brave men and women in uniform who rose to the challenge in the months that followed. They will be reminded that our country cannot be free unless we are strong.”

    The DOD Personnel Pentagon Memorial Organization, a voluntary association of civilian and military personnel, is organizing the campaign, and they are not accepting any public financing.

    The group is planning to spend up to $12 million on initial construction, and the remainder will be spent on maintenance for the memorial. The fundraising effort began on July 21 and runs through August 8.

    The goal is to have construction completed by next summer so the public will be able to visit the memorial in September, 2004. The opening will not be held on September 11 in order to fulfill the request of the Family Steering Committee which hopes to avoid adding to the “already emotional nature of the day.”

    Groups involved in the completion of this project include: the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD), Washington Headquarters Services (WHS), the Pentagon Renovation Program (PENREN), Real Estate and Facilities (RE&F), the Office of Family Policy, Family Members of Pentagon Victims, and Kaseman Beckman Amsterdam Studio (KBAS), who designed the winning memorial concept. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers was responsible for the Pentagon Memorial Site Selection and Design Competition.

    Those wishing to contribute to the memorial fund are directed to make their checks payable to the U.S. Treasury and send them to:

    Washington Headquarters Services Pentagon Memorial / Repair Fund Budget & Finance, Room 3B269 1155 Defense Pentagon Washington, DC 20301-1155.

    Copyright